Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by choosing a candidate at random.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Businessman Mark Cuban (IND)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by choosing a candidate at random.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Texas Senator Ted Cruz (R)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by choosing a candidate at random.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Oregon Senator Jeff Merkley (D)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by choosing a candidate at random.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Virginia Senator Mark Warner (D)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by choosing a candidate at random.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper (D)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by choosing a candidate at random.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (South Carolina Senator Tim Scott (R)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by choosing a candidate at random.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker (R)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Massachusetts Representative Joe Kennedy III (D)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by comparing votes in previous rounds.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Texas Representative Will Hurd (R)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by comparing votes in previous rounds.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Fmr. Ohio Governor John Kasich (IND)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (California Governor Gavin Newsom (D)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

A tie was resolved by comparing votes in previous rounds.No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Florida Senator Marco Rubio (R)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (California Senator Kamala Harris (D)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Fmr. UN Ambassador Nikki Haley (R)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

No candidate has the number of votes needed to guarantee victory, so the last-place candidate (Fmr. South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D)) is eliminated. Ballots for that candidate are counted toward their next highest ranking.

Note: If this doesn't make sense, try reading the
How it works page, view the
table form,
or ask a question.
The dotted line represents
the number of votes that guarantees victory (50% of counted votes).

Businessman Andrew Yang (D) has enough votes to guarantee victory and is declared a winner.In the end, 49.1% of all cast ballots counted toward a winner. This compares to 20.8%
if only the first-round votes were used.

The
Ballot Depth section shows how much lower rankings contributed to the tally.

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